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In the beginning, weight lifting was just a stress reliever—whenever I would go to the gym, I would just feel so much better afterward.”
That post-workout euphoria is familiar to Marcus Saulsberry, who described himself as a high school and collegiate band geek before he first started going to the gym about a dozen years ago.
“I was very slender and small, and lifting weights was not my forte—push-ups, I hated,” Saulsberry, 36, recalls with a laugh.
Saulsberry plans to protect himself from unrealistic expectations with the same philosophy that has guided his fitness thus far.
“If you feel like you’re bringing your best package, or you’re bringing your best body to the stage, then I assume that you’ve accomplished what you wanted to do,” he says. I’m talking about extra-straight people and friendships that I never knew would come about from the gym.
I’m looking to be the best me that I can be. If anybody is looking for the accolades or affirmations of others, then that’s already the wrong start, I feel.”
Ryan Lee
Ryan Lee is a freelance writer in Atlanta and a columnist for The Georgia Voice, which focuses on LGBTQ issues in the south.
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Some men start acting like a big man on campus the moment they cross the burning sands, and Saulsberry noticed how some people began expecting his ego to grow as big as his muscles.“I pride myself on being one of those people that didn’t change just because you look a certain way,” says Saulsberry, who has nonetheless been treated differently by people as he has bulked up.
“I’ve been called a muscle head, I’ve been called a jock,” says Saulsberry, a former drum major and J-setter whose flamboyant behavior can draw confused side-eyes.
“We had to stay physically fit [for the band]—we ran, we marched, jumping jacks, that’s about it.”
Calisthenics hadn’t prepared Saulsberry for his first months at the gym, and it took years of starts and stops before he no longer hated lifting weights.
“Because it hurt!” he says in a tone recognizable to anyone who has ever heard their muscles scream.
Saulsberry’s motivation also waned in those early years because, like many, he expected to start looking ripped after a few weeks of pumping iron.
Saulsberry didn’t begin seeing changes in his physique until about three or four years into his fitness journey, and by then going to the gym had evolved into much more than working out.
“I’m a very social person, so meeting people, getting feedback from people who you might aspire to, getting advice or just saying, ‘Hey, how are you doing’ to your regulars, that’s really where the love grew,” he says.
Men with chiseled chests and eight-pack abs have long been considered the default standard of homosexual desire, and as a result, the embodiment of a fantasy that is partly blamed for higher rates of body image anxiety among gay men.
“A greater percentage of gay men than heterosexual men reported that they were unattractive, uncomfortable in a swimsuit, dissatisfied with their physical appearance, and dissatisfied with their muscle size and tone,” says Dr.
Jamal Essayli, a psychologist and assistant professor at Penn State College of Medicine who co-authored a study on male body image issues in 2016. “I’m not looking to be perfect for someone else. “Feeling boxed-in or stereotyped in any way is potentially harmful [and] individuals who look more ‘physically ideal’ can experience the same, or greater, mental health struggles than others do.”